Invest in companies with high growth potential and expanding market presence
Consistent 20%+ annual revenue growth over multiple years
Capturing larger portion of their market and entering new segments
Heavy investment in R&D and continuous product/service innovation
Ability to grow rapidly without proportional increase in costs
Visionary leadership with proven execution track record
Operating in industries with significant growth potential ahead
Look for consistent 20-30%+ year-over-year revenue increases
EPS growth should match or exceed revenue growth over time
PEG ratio below 1 indicates stock may be undervalued relative to growth
Improving margins show operational efficiency and pricing power
High ROIC demonstrates efficient capital allocation and competitive advantages
High retention indicates product-market fit and sustainable growth
Companies like TCS, Infosys, Wipro driving digital transformation globally
Digital payments, online retail, and financial technology disrupting traditional models
Indian pharma companies expanding globally with biosimilars and generics
EV manufacturers and battery technology companies in high-growth phase
Solar, wind, and green energy companies benefiting from sustainability push
D2C brands and premium consumer goods targeting growing middle class
Fidelity Magellan Fund manager, known for "invest in what you know" philosophy
Pioneer of growth investing, author of "Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits"
ARK Invest founder, focuses on disruptive innovation and technology
Avenue Supermarts (DMart) founder, turned retail growth into massive wealth
Growth stocks often trade at premium P/E ratios; focus on future potential, not current price
Track revenue growth, user metrics, and forward guidance closely each quarter
Protect gains by setting stop losses that adjust as stock price rises
Spread investments across multiple high-growth sectors to reduce risk
Growth stocks can swing 20-30% on earnings; stay calm during corrections
Stay informed about technological shifts and regulatory changes affecting growth sectors